May 6, 2026 Port
Kyuquot
Today was mail day.
I’ve been tied up to the public dock in Kyuquot—the on on Walter Island—all day. I stayed here last night, and today I’ve mostly just been sitting on the boat working. Around noon, a floatplane from Air Nootka landed and tied up right next to me. The pilot began unloading parcels, which appeared to be deliveries for Canada Post. The post office is just up at the top of the pier in the general store.
A number of people came down and began helping unload the parcels, talking with the pilot as they worked. They hoisted the boxes straight up onto the pier, so nobody had to walk them all the way around.
Then, all day, little skiffs came and went, people picking up their packages.
The Toyota Corolla of Kyuquot appears to be a 14-foot Lund with 9.9 horsepower. The Ford F-150 is maybe 18 to 20 feet of fibreglass, centre console with a small cabin, and at least 200 horsepower.
There are a lot of outboards here. This is a sound full of outboards. On the pier, there are five or six 200-plus horsepower Yamaha engines that appear to have been abandoned, either waiting for an empty ship to haul them away, or kept around for parts, I can’t tell.
It is so unusual, at least from my way of life, to be in a place where small boats are the primary mode of transport. It was kind of like being parked downtown in front of a general store, except everyone was coming in by skiff.
Often people would come in, throw one line onto the dock, step off, leave the engine idling, and begin the trek up the pier to the post office.
It has been incredibly warm. Just a really peaceful, beautiful day.
Even though there is a very alive and bustling nature to the sound of boats coming and going — lots of fishing, people busy at work — there is also this sense of total peace, where things are moving in their own clocks. It is certainly true that this coast is subject to the curve of time.
There’s also this paradox of feeling like there are people around, like the place is alive, but then there are long periods where I sit here and don’t see anybody at all. It’s just quiet.
It’s a place full of paradoxes.
I was able to get a few fresh things from the general store: a few pounds of frozen ground beef, some eggs, bacon, yoghurt, lemons and limes, and a loaf of bread.
I’ve been trying to make a sourdough starter, but I think it’s struggling because I don’t have the right flour to start it off, and also because of the high variation in temperature. It’s often not warm enough for it to really get going.
I also bought some fresh smoked sockeye salmon from one of the young women who came by on her boat. It was smoked just across the way at the village.
I’m looking forward to that.
Location Kyuquot